It seemed like science fiction until November 2022, when OpenAI’s ChatGPT sparked a wave of interest in artificial intelligence’s real-world potential.
Since then, almost every industry has experienced a whirlwind of AI activity.
Banks are using AI to hedge risks, drugmakers are investigating its use to develop better medicines more quickly, manufacturers are using it to improve productivity, and retailers are using it to improve supply chains. The military is even considering how AI may help on the battlefield.
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At the center of all this interest sits Nvidia, the world’s largest maker of graphic processing units, or GPUs, ideally suited to training and running AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, and Microsoft’s CoPilot.
Demand for Nvidia’s chips has been so strong that its revenue and profits have soared, taking the stock to arguably stratospheric levels.
Nvidia’s stock price rallied 171% in 2024 alone, raising big questions over whether the company’s valuation, which now exceeds $2.8 trillion, is stretched.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has seen his company experience rapid growth thanks to an AI spending boom.
PATRICK T. FALLON/Getty Images
The biggest player in a fast-growing market
Some of the largest technology companies have ramped their spending to capitalize on the AI opportunity.
Related: Fund manager who predicted Nvidia rally revamps stock forecast
In 2024, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon’s capital expenditures totaled $230 billion, up from $144 billion in 2023. In 2025, that spending is expected to surge again to $325 billion. Much of the increase has gone to upgrading older servers and the silicon chips necessary to power them in cloud networks.
Nvidia is at the forefront of this trend thanks to its high-powered GPUs, which were best known for powering video gaming consoles and mining cryptocurrency before the AI boom.
The surge in demand catapulted Nvidia’s revenue to $130 billion in 2024 from about $27 billion in 2023.
With so much money at stake, Nvidia is plowing dollars back into research and development to stave off rivals, including Advanced Micro Devices, which launched its own AI chips last year, and companies like Broadcom, which is working with OpenAI to develop its own chips.
The potential is undeniably large.
Last October, AMD’s CEO Lisa Su said the GPU market could grow to $500 billion in 2028, or more than 60% per year.
Nvidia’s valuation comes under the microscope
Technology stocks like Nvidia aren’t known for being cheap. Often, they command higher than market price-to-earnings (P/E) multiples.
Related: Veteran analyst offers AI spending prediction as worries mount
It’s not uncommon to find fast-growing technology stocks trading with P/E ratios in the high double digits. Some high-flyers have also seen triple-digit multiples that dwarf the S&P 500’s average forward P/E ratio of about 22.
Given Nvidia’s massive run-up, debate has grown over whether Nvidia’s stock price has gotten ahead of itself.
Stacy Rasgon, an analyst with Bernstein Société Générale Group, is the latest analyst to weigh in on the debate. Rasgon’s take on Nvidia’s valuation may surprise you.
Nvidia’s stock price dropped about 15% this year as investors became antsy about the likelihood of AI spending continuing to grow rapidly.
Rasgon finds that drop “a little stunning,” noting that Nvidia is only now accelerating sales of Blackwell, its newest generation of AI chips.
“After yesterday’s rout, the stock trades at ~25x NTM (next twelve months) earnings, their weakest level in a year and close to 10-year lows,” wrote Rasgon’s team in a research note to clients. “In fact, the stock now trades BELOW parity relative to the SOX (something we have seen only once or twice in the past decade) and at only a slight S&P premium, the lowest they have been since 2016.”
Nvidia’s 5-year trailing P/E low is 26.
The SOX is the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, comprising 30 of the largest semiconductor stocks.
Last quarter, Nvidia sold $11 billion worth of Blackwell chips. On its fourth-quarter conference call, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said it was the fastest ramp in Nvidia’s history.
“Our post-earnings conversations with the company indicated the $11B in FQ4 Blackwell revenues all shipped in January (suggesting the floodgates are now open) and the company indicated to us that demand will continue to exceed supply for the next several quarters as they ramp,” added Rasgon.
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If true, then Blackwell’s sales could continue supporting Nvidia’s revenue growth, and once production is at scale, profitability should bounce back.
Gross margin is expected to fall to 71% this quarter. It was 73% last quarter, down from 76% in the year prior. Nvidia says it should rebound to a mid-70% margin later this year.
Blackwell’s sales potential and the chance for a rebound in margin could mean that Nvidia is in the bargain rack, given its relatively low P/E ratio compared to its historical levels.
“Valuation is getting increasingly attractive,” said Rasgon.
Bernstein’s Nvidia stock price target is $185.
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